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view lisp/compare-w.el @ 20914:8f189ffad604
(c-forward-syntactic-ws, c-backward-syntactic-ws):
Don't narrow, just make a simple check against the given limit.
(c-collect-line-comments): New function.
(c-literal-limits): New function that finds the start and end pos
of a comment or string surrounding point.
(c-literal-limits-fast): A faster variant of `c-literal-limits'
for newer Emacsen where the state returned from
`parse-partial-sexp' contains the starting pos of the last literal.
(c-parse-state): Use (c-point 'bod) instead of
beginning-of-defun directly.
(c-guess-basic-syntax): Fixed a few byte compiler warnings.
(c-backward-to-start-of-do): Break infloop for
invalid code, e.g. when someone types while (TRUE) { at the top of
a buffer, we shouldn't hang when the { is typed!
(c-backward-to-start-of-if): Ensure never
move forward, not even if point < lim.
(c-search-uplist-for-classkey): When searching up for a class key,
instead of hardcoding the extended search for "extern", use the new
variable c-extra-toplevel-key, which is language dependent. For C++,
this variable includes the keyword "namespace" which will match C++
namespace introducing blocks.
(c-guess-basic-syntax): Support for recognizing C++ namespace
blocks, by elaborating on the mechanism used to find external
language blocks. Searches which hardcoded "extern" now use
c-extra-toplevel-key, a language dependent variable. Case clauses
that were modified: CASE 5A.1, CASE 5A.4, CASE 5F, CASE 5I, CASE
14A.
CASE 3: we can now determine whether we're at the beginning of a
cpp macro definition, or inside the middle of one. Set syntax to
'cpp-macro in the former case, 'cpp-macro-cont in the latter. In
both cases, the relpos is the beginning of the macro.
(c-forward-syntactic-ws): Added code that skips forward over
multi-line cpp macros.
(c-beginning-of-macro): Moved, and made into a defsubst. This
function can now actually find the beginning of a multi-line C
preprocessor macro.
(c-backward-syntactic-ws): Use c-beginning-of-macro to skip backwards
over multi-line macro definitions.
(c-in-literal, c-fast-in-literal): Use c-beginning-of-macro to
find out whether we're in a multi-line macro definition.
(c-fast-in-literal): Function which should be faster than
c-in-literal. In XEmacs, this uses buffer-syntactic-context.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 17 Feb 1998 07:08:44 +0000 |
parents | 653ef38fd02e |
children | ac1673121774 |
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;;; compare-w.el --- compare text between windows for Emacs. ;; Copyright (C) 1986, 1989, 1993, 1997 Free Software Foundation, Inc. ;; Maintainer: FSF ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs. ;; GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify ;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by ;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) ;; any later version. ;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, ;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the ;; GNU General Public License for more details. ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License ;; along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the ;; Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, ;; Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. ;;; Commentary: ;; This package provides one entry point, compare-windows. It compares ;; text starting from point in two adjacent windows, advancing point ;; until it finds a difference. Option variables permit you to ignore ;; whitespace differences, or case differences, or both. ;;; Code: (defvar compare-windows-whitespace "[ \t\n]+" "*Regexp that defines whitespace sequences for \\[compare-windows]. Changes in whitespace are optionally ignored. The value of `compare-windows-whitespace' may instead be a function; this function is called in each buffer, with point at the current scanning point. The function's job is to categorize any whitespace around (including before) point; it should also advance past any whitespace. The function is passed one argument, the point where `compare-windows' was originally called; it should not consider any text before that point. If the function returns the same value for both buffers, then the whitespace is considered to match, and is skipped.") (defvar compare-ignore-case nil "*Non-nil means \\[compare-windows] ignores case differences.") ;;;###autoload (defun compare-windows (ignore-whitespace) "Compare text in current window with text in next window. Compares the text starting at point in each window, moving over text in each one as far as they match. This command pushes the mark in each window at the prior location of point in that window. If both windows display the same buffer, the mark is pushed twice in that buffer: first in the other window, then in the selected window. A prefix arg means ignore changes in whitespace. The variable `compare-windows-whitespace' controls how whitespace is skipped. If `compare-ignore-case' is non-nil, changes in case are also ignored." (interactive "P") (let* (p1 p2 maxp1 maxp2 b1 b2 w2 (progress 1) (opoint1 (point)) opoint2 (skip-func (if ignore-whitespace (if (stringp compare-windows-whitespace) 'compare-windows-skip-whitespace compare-windows-whitespace)))) (setq p1 (point) b1 (current-buffer)) (setq w2 (next-window (selected-window) nil 'visible)) (if (eq w2 (selected-window)) (error "No other window")) (setq p2 (window-point w2) b2 (window-buffer w2)) (setq opoint2 p2) (setq maxp1 (point-max)) (save-excursion (set-buffer b2) (push-mark p2 t) (setq maxp2 (point-max))) (push-mark) (while (> progress 0) ;; If both buffers have whitespace next to point, ;; optionally skip over it. (and skip-func (save-excursion (let (p1a p2a w1 w2 result1 result2) (setq result1 (funcall skip-func opoint1)) (setq p1a (point)) (set-buffer b2) (goto-char p2) (setq result2 (funcall skip-func opoint2)) (setq p2a (point)) (if (or (stringp compare-windows-whitespace) (and result1 result2 (eq result1 result2))) (setq p1 p1a p2 p2a))))) (let ((size (min (- maxp1 p1) (- maxp2 p2))) (case-fold-search compare-ignore-case)) (setq progress (compare-buffer-substrings b2 p2 (+ size p2) b1 p1 (+ size p1))) (setq progress (if (zerop progress) size (1- (abs progress)))) (setq p1 (+ p1 progress) p2 (+ p2 progress))) ;; Advance point now rather than later, in case we're interrupted. (goto-char p1) (set-window-point w2 p2)) (if (= (point) opoint1) (ding)))) ;; Move forward over whatever might be called whitespace. ;; compare-windows-whitespace is a regexp that matches whitespace. ;; Match it at various starting points before the original point ;; and find the latest point at which a match ends. ;; Don't try starting points before START, though. ;; Value is non-nil if whitespace is found. ;; If there is whitespace before point, but none after, ;; then return t, but don't advance point. (defun compare-windows-skip-whitespace (start) (let ((end (point)) (beg (point)) (opoint (point))) (while (or (and (looking-at compare-windows-whitespace) (<= end (match-end 0)) ;; This match goes past END, so advance END. (progn (setq end (match-end 0)) (> (point) start))) (and (/= (point) start) ;; Consider at least the char before point, ;; unless it is also before START. (= (point) opoint))) ;; keep going back until whitespace ;; doesn't extend to or past end (forward-char -1)) (setq beg (point)) (goto-char end) (or (/= beg opoint) (/= end opoint)))) (provide 'compare-w) ;;; compare-w.el ends here